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Discovery adds weight to view that Europaâs ocean could be most promising place in solar system to look for alien life
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Award for work on shapes of proteins raises prospect of AI research earning a Nobel for first time
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The discovery is likely to change archaeologists’ understanding of the evolution of early human technology
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Ian Sample hears from the Guardianâs Europe environment correspondent, Ajit Niranjan, about the reporting he has been doing for the launch of our new Europe edition. He talks about Osijek, a Croatian city that has the highest heat mortality rate ...
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The findings contradict the commonly-held belief that ignoring these thoughts means they stay in our unconscious mind.
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Scientists find continuous crying by mouse pups triggers release of oxytocin, which controls milk-release response
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Ancient timber preserved in a riverbed suggests humans were building wooden structures 500,000 years ago.
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Researchers reported on the excavation of well-preserved wood, thought to date back at least 476,000 years, at a site in Kalambo Falls, Zambia.
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The discovery is likely to change archaeologists’ understanding of the evolution of early human technology
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Trigger hairs that close its trap contain heat-sensitive cells that react to a rapid temperature rise
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In today’s newsletter: Black professors make up less than 1% of science academics – will a new Royal Society scheme address the imbalance?
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The Prince of Wales joins the global stage in New York as the Earthshot Prize finalists are revealed.
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The third ingredient needed for the presence of pink diamonds at surface level is continents that were stretched during continental break-up.
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It also combined with poor maintenance of the broken dams and because the city is built on floodplains, exposing thousands of homes.
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Exciting scientific developments offer solutions to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). The only barrier is cost, says Prof Devi Sridhar, the chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh